At his Tuesday unveiling, Paul Lambert said he did not care if he was ‘fifteenth or fiftieth’ choice for the Stoke City job. After a rousing second-half performance secured an instant impact for the Glaswegian, the Potters supporters who slated his appointment may well share those emotions.

The bet365 stadium on a freezing January afternoon did not seem like an obvious place for a party, especially after a turgid opening stanza best forgotten.

But goals from Joe Allen and Mame Diouf – and a clean sheet rarer than rocking horse droppings in these parts – had them dancing in its aisles. Not that Lambert, whose side clambered out of the relegation zone, until Sunday afternoon at least, was in the mood for hitting the town.

Paul Lambert made a winning start to life as Stoke manager after his side registered a comfortable win against Huddersfield

The Stoke manager leaped in the air and pumped his fists in celebration after his side doubled their advantage

Mame Biram Diouf tidily finished into the corner of the net from insisde the penalty area to score Stoke's second goal

The Senegalese forward celebrated his strike by getting on his knees and kissing the turf at the Bet365 Stadium

Stoke had taken the lead early into the second half after midfielder Joe Allen finished off a lovely flowing team move

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‘Tired,’ said Lambert when asked how he felt, before a nod to the atmosphere. ‘I’m delighted for the players and supporters. They were my main concern – I wanted them to bounce off each other. At times you can’t here yourself shout out there.’

Lambert, who replaced Mark Hughes, brought injury-hit Ryan Shawcross back into the side as captain and planted his wily compatriot, Charlie Adam in midfield, but in a scrappy opening half, Diouf clattering into a linesman raised the biggest cheer.

The only real action came when the superb Maxim Choupo-Moting lobbed a ball over a Terriers high line for Xherdan Shaqiri, whose dink was met by the outstretched arm of Jonas Lossl. It was a brilliant reflex save from the Dane which prevented a goal in 45 minutes of football not worthy of one.

That high line continued to fail and, on 53 minutes, it did so with serious consequences when Adam’s cunning lob released Choupo-Moting. The Cameroon international’s low cross found Allen at the far post and he side-footed home. Immediately, cries of ‘Delilah’ filled the air from the majority of the stadium-record 29,785 present. Lift-off for Lambert.

The second goal, which arrived on 69 minutes, came as no surprise. Choupo-Moting picked up the ball on halfway and played it to Shaqiri, whose first-time backheel to Diouf was a work of art. ‘What a player he is by the way,’ beamed Lambert.

Diouf, all alone, finished off. Forget ‘Delilah’, ‘Paul Lambert’s Barmy Army’ was belted out from the Boothen End. Huddersfield created few chances in a game in which they may have been found out.

‘Everybody knows they play a high press,’ Lambert said. ‘The first goal was something we worked on because they play with a high line.’

Paul Lambert acknowledges the Stoke City supporters as he prepares to take charge of his first game as manager there

The Scot shakes the hand of Huddersfield counterpart David Wagner before kick-off on Saturday afternoon

Before the match both teams paid their respects to West Brom legend Cyrille Regis who sadly died this week

Regis, who is widely recognised as being a pioneer for black players in football, died age 59